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Movie reviews |
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The Godfather
The
three-part gangster saga, Italian-American director Francis
Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1972), The Godfather, Part II
(1974), and The Godfather, Part III (1990) is a superb trilogy
of films. The first two parts of the lush saga are among the
most celebrated, landmark films of all time. Many film reviewers
consider the second part equal or superior to the original,
although the first part was a tremendous critical and commercial
success - and the highest grossing film of its time. The film
contributed to a resurgence in the American film industry,
after a decade of competition from cinema abroad.
One of the original "Movie
Brats" who had not had a hit after seven films, director
Coppola collaborated on the epic film's screenplay with Mario
Puzo who had written a best-selling novel of the same name
about a Mafia dynasty (the Corleones). The Godfather catapulted
Francis Ford Coppola to directorial superstardom, and popularized
the following euphemistic phrase (of brutal coercion): "I'm
gonna make him an offer he can't refuse."
The almost three hour, R-rated
saga film (for violence and graphic language) won three Oscars:
Best Picture, Best Actor (Marlon Brando refused to accept
the award) and Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another
Medium (Mario Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola). The other seven
nominations included three for Best Supporting Actor (James
Caan, Robert Duvall, and Al Pacino), Best Director, Best Sound,
Best Film Editing, and Best Costume Design.
Gangster films are one of the
oldest of film genres (starring Edward G. Robinson, James
Cagney and Humphrey Bogart), emerging as an influential force
in the early 1930s (e.g., Little Caesar (1930), Public Enemy
(1931), and Scarface (1932)). This gangster film re-invented
the gangster genre, elevating the classic Hollywood gangster
film to a higher level by portraying the gangster figure as
a tragic hero. [With the disappearance of the Production Code,
retribution for the gangster's crimes was not an automatic
requirement.] The film is characterized by superb acting and
deep character studies, beautiful photography and choreography,
authentic recreation of the period, a bittersweet romantic
sub-plot, a rich score by Nino Rota, and superbly-staged portrayals
of gangster violence. Its grim, dark passages and bright exterior
scenes are all part of the beautiful cinematography by Gordon
Willis.
The Godfather is an insightful
sociological study of violence, power, honor and obligation,
corruption, justice and crime in America. Part I of The Godfather
Trilogy centers on the Corleone crime "family" in
the boroughs of New York City in the mid 1940s, dominated
at first by aging godfather/patriarch "Don" Vito
Corleone (Marlon Brando in a tremendous, award-winning acting
portrayal that revived his career). A turn-of-the-century
Silician immigrant, he is the head of one of the five Italian-American
"families" that operates a crime syndicate. The
'honorable' crime "family," working outside the
system due to exclusion by social prejudice, serves as a metaphor
for the way business (the pursuit of the American dream) is
conducted in capitalistic, profit-making corporations and
governmental circles.
This epic story traces the history
of their close-knit Mafia family and organization over a ten
year period (although the specific words "Mafia"
and "Cosa Nostra" are not found in the film's script
- they were replaced with "the family"). The presiding,
dominant Corleone patriarch, who is threatened by the rise
of modern criminal activities - the drug trade, is ultimately
succeeded by his decent youngest son Michael (Al Pacino),
a US Marine Corps officer who becomes even more ruthless to
persist. Family loyalty and blood ties are juxtaposed with
brutal and vengeful blood-letting and the inevitable downfall
of the family. Romanticized scenes of the domestic home life
of members of the family - a family wedding, shopping, a baptism,
kitchen cooking, etc., are intertwined with scenes of horrific
violence and murder contracts - a total of 23 deaths litter
the film.
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